Grenoble
It is a little after 9 p.m. when the canine brigade mobilized that evening is about to leave on patrol.
Flashing light on, the unmarked van sets off at full speed in the direction of Echirolles, a suburb south of Grenoble.
The alarm from the police station of this town, which is one of the seven grouped together in the public security district (CSP) of Grenoble, was triggered.
On the spot, however, no trace of break-in.
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In the van, the adrenaline goes down, before the radio signals fireworks mortars in Saint-Martin-d'Hères, another town in the south of the city, known, like Échirolles, to house certain sensitive areas. .
When the brigade arrived, the place was deserted but, not far from there, a man hurried on.
It is 9:35 p.m. and the curfew, which applies throughout the Grenoble metropolis, has been in effect for more than half an hour.
Facing the three police officers of the brigade, the man, cigarette on his lips, tries to
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